The Public’s Money Demands a Public Accounting
There’s no such thing as “private spending” when public money is involved. If an organization is funded by taxpayers, it’s not a private entity—it’s a public responsibility.
We now know that 7,000 politically tied nonprofits are funneling 90% of taxpayer funding earmarked for NGOs, moving $300 billion each year without meaningful oversight. These aren’t isolated incidents—they’re systemic failures. This isn’t charity. It’s an untraceable pipeline. The result? A bloated ecosystem of favored organizations insulated from scrutiny and accountability, propped up by your money.
Every dollar of government funding should trigger automatic public disclosure. Books open. Communications disclosed. If they’re doing honest work, they have nothing to hide. If not, that silence is complicity—and it’s time to cut them off. The solution isn’t more regulation. It’s sunlight. It’s ownership. And it starts with the truth: government money should never be untraceable again.